Woman seriously injured in Chariton County crash

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 21-year-old woman from Brookfield, Missouri, was seriously injured in a single-vehicle crash on Wednesday morning on Highway 11, about a mile east of Mendon, according to a crash report from the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

The report says that the woman drove a 2007 Chevrolet Silverado westbound when it went off the left side of the road and overturned.

The report says the woman was not wearing a seatbelt and was flown to University Hospital. The Chevrolet was totaled.

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Yucca Valley High School teacher arrested for embezzlement from the school’s Parent Teacher Organization

Haley Meberg

YUCCA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) – A Yucca Valley High School teacher was arrested Wednesday morning for embezzlement from the school’s Parent Teacher Organization. 

The Morongo Basin Sheriff’s Department reports that on June 18, a member of the Parent Teacher Organization called law enforcement to report the unauthorized withdrawal of funds from the PTO account. 

The current 34-year-old teacher, Ariana Rodriguez, was said to be the Parent Teacher Organizations account overseer and embezzled over $8,500 throughout a two-year period. 

At approximately 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday morning investigators in this case obtained the arrest warrant for Rodriguez and booked her at Morongo Basin jail with a bail set at $30,000. 

The Morongo Unified School District has stated that, “The staff member has been placed on administrative leave, pending the outcome of the investigation. We are fully cooperating with law enforcement and will continue to do so throughout the investigation.”

No official charges have been made at this time against the accused. 

Anyone with information about this investigation is asked to contact the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department Morongo Basin Station at (760) 366-4175 or contact We-Tip at 1-888-78-CRIME.

Stay with News Channel 3 for more updates on this investigation.

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Oregon State Penitentiary inmate convicted in 2003 Bend robbery, kidnap and assault dies at 72

Barney Lerten

SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) — A 72-year-old Oregon State Penitentiary inmate who was convicted and received a lengthy sentence in a 2003 robbery, kidnapping and assault in Bend died Wednesday morning at the prison’s infirmary, Oregon Department of Corrections officials said.

Stuart Ross Anderson III “passed away in the infirmary while on hospice care,” the announcement said.

As with all in-custody deaths, the Oregon State Police have been notified, and the State Medical Examiner will determine the cause of death.

Anderson entered state custody on June 22, 2004, from Deschutes County, with an earliest release date of January 4, 2040. Anderson was 72 years old. Next of kin has been notified.

According to a state Court of Appeals ruling that affirmed Anderson’s lengthy sentence, the then-Bend resident entered a fabric store (Joann’s Fabrics) in Bend on August 10, 2003, approached a cashier and demanded money, claiming to have a gun.

After receiving money, he left and crossed the parking lot toward Timber’s Tavern, where a worker was outside talking with a friend.

The ruling, quoting official accounts, said Anderson tried to enter the worker’s truck and demanded the man give him a ride. He refused and dragged Anderson out of his truck, then began walking away.

A fabric store employee yelled to the tavern worker, asking him to stop Anderson because he’d just robbed the store. As he approached the suspect, Anderson pulled a heavy rubber mallet from his bag and struck the victim in the head, knocking him unconscious. He was soon arrested by Bend Police.

DOC said it “takes all in-custody deaths seriously. The agency is responsible for the care and custody of approximately 12,000 men and women who are incarcerated in 12 institutions across the state. While crime information is public record, DOC elects to disclose only upon request out of respect for any family or victims.”

OSP is a multi-custody prison located in Salem that houses approximately 2,000 adults in custody. OSP is surrounded by a 25-foot-high wall with 10 towers. The facility has multiple special housing units including disciplinary segregation, behavioral health, intermediate care housing, and an infirmary (with hospice) with 24-hour nursing care. OSP participates in prison industries with Oregon Corrections Enterprises including the furniture factory, laundry, metal shop, and contact center. It provides a range of correctional programs and services including education, work-based education, work crews, and pre-release services. OSP was established in 1866 and, until 1959, was Oregon’s only prison.

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Five vehicles involved in Callaway County pileup on Interstate 70

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Five vehicles were involved in a crash Wednesday afternoon on Interstate 70 in Callaway County, though only minor injuries were reported.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol report says the crash happened when a GMC Acadia SUV ran into a Ford F-250 truck at about 1:50 p.m. on the westbound side at the Auxvasse Creek bridge.

A 58-year-old St. Charles woman in a separate pickup truck, an F-150, was taken by ambulance to University Hospital with minor injuries, the patrol reported. Three of the five vehicles had to be towed from the scene.

The crash included drivers from Missouri, Kentucky and Texas.

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Boone County prosecutor names new top assistant, keeps veteran on as consultant

Lucas Geisler

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) –

The Boone County Prosecutor’s Office named a new top assistant, but will keep the person who just left the spot close by.

Prosecutor Roger Johnson said Wednesday that he named Melissa Buchanan to serve as the first assistant in the office. Buchanan will replace veteran prosecutor Sue Boresi, who left the office on Friday.

Buchanan has worked in the Boone County Prosecutor’s Office since February 2024. Johnson said Buchanan worked in the special victims unit, which deals with sexual assaults, domestic violence and crimes against children. Buchanan is slated to make $102,000 annually.

“Melissa Buchanan’s promotion to first assistant brings an exceptional level of energy and dedication to our leadership team,” Johnson said. “That passion is vital as we work to meet the challenges ahead and advance the cause of public safety in Boone County.”

Buchanan worked as a public defender for five years in Columbia after graduating from the UMKC law school. She moved to the city of Columbia’s legal department as an adviser to the police department and staff member on the Commission on Human Rights. She became head of the Missouri Secretary of State’s Securities Enforcement Division in 2023.

The county plans to keep Boresi around the office as a consultant to finish three murder cases. The county would pay her a $12,000 retainer to handle the pending cases against Adam Conner, Curtis Lewis and Randall Fox.

Boresi would make $1,500 for the first day of any trial and $1,000 for all subsequent days.

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Sheriff’s Office seeks help to find missing developmentally disabled an in Ammon

News Team

 AMMON, Idaho (KIFI) — The Bonneville County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s help to find a missing developmentally disabled man who walked away from a residential facility this morning.

Benjamin Howell, 48, left a facility near 17th Street and Curlew Drive in Ammon on foot around 11:00 AM today.

Howell is described as approximately 6 feet tall and 299 pounds, with dark, slicked-back hair and a curly goatee. He was last seen wearing dark clothing.

Authorities note that Mr. Howell has several developmental and mental health issues, which could cause him to be confrontational. They are asking anyone in the area of 17th Street and Curlew Drive to be on the lookout. If you see Benjamin Howell, please immediately contact dispatch at 208-529-1200.

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Unpacking Bryan Kohberger’s guilty plea deal to avoid death penalty in Idaho student killings

CNN

CNN

By Emma Tucker, CNN

(CNN) — Bryan Kohberger appeared expressionless as a judge asked if he murdered four Idaho college students in their off-campus home, answering “yes” to each name called out in the courtroom Wednesday.

At a change-of-plea hearing before state district Judge Steven Hippler in Boise, Idaho, the courtroom was packed with family members of the victims as Kohberger, a 30-year-old former PhD student of criminology, admitted his guilt to all five counts in the indictment and entered a plea deal that removes the possibility of the death penalty.

Kohberger had been charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary in Latah County, Idaho, in the fatal stabbings Ethan Chapin, 20; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Madison Mogen, 21, in the early morning hours of November 13, 2022, in their Moscow, Idaho, home.

CNN trial correspondent Jean Casarez has been closely following the investigation and was in the courtroom when Kohberger admitted guilt.

Here she breaks down some of the key pieces of the case and the plea deal:

Some of the questions and answers have been edited for length and clarity.

Q: Why did prosecutors decide to strike a plea deal now, despite strong evidence including DNA, surveillance and cell phone data?

A: I think that’s one of the biggest unanswered questions. We don’t know. Here’s what we do know: Prosecutors hold the key to whether a trial goes forward or whether there is a plea deal. This was a very solid case, and the defense had lost so much – they were not going to be able to present an alibi because they couldn’t establish there was anyone who saw him in another location when the killings took place.

I was talking to a prosecutor who told me this case is the case of a lifetime for a prosecutor. But this trial was going to cost a lot of money. This is Moscow’s case. Latah County would have to pay for it all. The case had been moved to Boise to ensure a fair trial for Kohberger. So, one can only surmise that judicial economy or saving money went into this, right?

Q: What do you think tipped the scales toward avoiding the death penalty for both the defense and prosecution?

A: This was the only bargaining tool. They bargained away the death penalty when he agreed to serve life in prison without any possibility of parole.

In 2003, serial killer Gary Ridgway bargained away the death penalty but there were conditions. He was going to tell authorities where all of the other victims were that he killed and he did that. Here, there are no conditions.

Q: Without a trial, there’s no public adjudication of any motive. How does that impact any closure in this case for the families and the public?

A: One of the issues with several of the families is that this was just too easy, that he was going to be able to sign the dotted line, done deal, then he can live his life forever. They wanted answers. They wanted to know if anybody else knew about it, where the murder weapon came from, why he went to that particular house, why he went up to the third floor. And those questions conceivably will never be answered.

If you look at what the father of Kaylee Goncalves said, he’s very upset because he believes no one is caring about these four young lives that were taken so soon right as they were beginning their adulthood. The family of Madison Mogen spoke outside of court, and they said through their attorney that this could be closure, they can move on and it’s alright. But the father of Xana Kernodle is saying it’s not alright, that they’re not going to ever really know the truth.

Q: What were the reactions and emotions you could sense in the room when he admitted guilt?

A: It was very tense in the courtroom. Very tense but very silent. The media had been told to not show any emotion in the courtroom, and I wonder if the families were told that because they were so intense, they were staring at Kohberger very strongly. They were staring at the judge very strongly, but I did not see actual emotion coming out of them except from Kaylee Goncalves’ aunt. That’s who I heard it was. She had a Kleenex, she was crying so hard, but it was silent – she wasn’t making any audible sounds at all.

When the prosecutor said, “We have still never found the knife, the murder weapon,” I looked at Kohberger. I wanted to see if there was a reaction because there’s one person that knows where that murder weapon is, and it’s him. There was no reaction to that. He didn’t move a muscle in his face.

Kohberger never once looked at the courtroom, looked at the people in the courtroom. He was in a stoic gaze with no emotion whatsoever. It was just like he did this every day.

When he had to take the oath that he would tell the truth, Kohberger jumped up and put his hand up. The judge said, “You don’t have to stand up. I know you’re trying to be respectful to the court, but you don’t have to stand up.”

Q: After Kohberger is sentenced, what happens to the gag order that has kept the parties from speaking publicly?

A: After sentencing, the case is over, so the judge has to lift that gag order because they have a First Amendment right to speak. The gag order was to preserve a fair trial before a jury for Kohberger. Both sides are not requesting a pre-sentencing report, which is normally done before sentencing. Sentencing is going to take place at this point on July 23. The prosecutor said they want to give all family members a chance to speak.

Q: Prosecutor Bill Thompson choked up a couple of times – most notably as he was finishing his recitation of the facts and said the names of the four victims. What did you make of that and was there any significance behind that moment to you, having covered this case from the beginning?

A: I’ve never seen him get emotional in any pretrial hearing. This is the first time, but a prosecutor has empathy for victims because although they represent the people, they indirectly represent the victims. That’s who they care about. Maybe it got to him at that moment, but I’m sure that some of the family members would say, ‘Well, if that emotion is there for those victims as we saw in court, why didn’t you structure the plea deal so he had to provide some answers and tell us why he did this?’

Q: What were the elements of the plea deal that the families of the victims would have liked to see or leave out?

A: Steve Goncalves said he wanted more facts. Not only answers to why the killings happened, but did anybody know about it or help? What happened with the knife? Why that house? Why that floor? Because in pretrial hearings, it has been said there was no connection to the victims.

Q: What can we expect from the upcoming sentencing hearing? Will families get a final chance to address him in court?

A: The big thing is going to be the victim impact statements. Attorneys don’t have to argue because there’s nothing to decide. A decision has been made with the agreement, so it’s the victims’ families. Some courts allow family members to directly look at and address the defendant, while other courts do not. It’ll be interesting to see the parameter and it’ll be interesting to see what they say.

But here’s the big one: Bryan Kohberger should be given a chance to address the court. In a normal sentencing, they are allowed to make a formal statement. Usually, that is to beg for mercy because you’re about to be sentenced. In this case it would just be something he wanted to say. Will he speak? Will he say something to the families?

Q: Can Kohberger appeal some aspect of his plea?

A: He is waiving his right to appeal, so he will live the rest of his life within a prison in Idaho, managed by the Department of Corrections.

Q: Some victims’ family members complained about how quickly a plea deal was reached. Does it always happen this quickly in similar cases?

A: No, it doesn’t happen as quickly. The family members do not live in Boise. They had to conceivably change plans, take off work, and it’s six hours from Moscow to Boise. That’s quite the drive right there. They don’t all live in Moscow, but they do not live in Boise. So it’s highly unusual.

I think it’s stunning that when Kohberger was posed the questions with their names: ‘Did you intentionally, deliberately and with premeditation murder Xana Kernodle?’ And he responded, ‘yes.’ No emotion at all.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Prominent Idaho Falls figure dies after rollover crash

News Team

AMERICAN FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Bruce Turner, 72, a well-known Idaho Falls resident and former president of the Rotary Club of Idaho Falls, died Sunday following a single-vehicle rollover crash east of American Falls.

Crash Details

According to the Idaho State Police, Turner and his 72-year-old wife were eastbound on I-86 in a 2001 Ford Explorer when their vehicle, driven by a 35-year-old Nigerian man, overcorrected and rolled into the median.

Both Turners were transported by ambulance to a local hospital, where Bruce Turner succumbed to his injuries. The Bannock County Coroner’s Office confirmed his death on Wednesday.

“My heart goes out to Bruce’s family and friends as they grieve this sudden loss,” stated Coroner Torey Danner.

Rotary Club of Idaho Falls Remembers Bruce Turner

Elaine Gray, who worked closely with Turner for four years in his role as Rotary Club Secretary, says the group is shocked and “extremely saddened and heartbroken over the loss of Bruce.”

Turner served as president of the Rotary Club of Idaho Falls from July 2015 to July 2016, then transitioned to the secretary position. Both Bruce and Barbara Turner were highly active in their local Episcopal Church and deeply involved in Rotary Club activities.

Gray says Bruce and Barbara could be found at almost every club service project, including spring and fall cleanup along the Idaho Falls Greenbelt, manning concession stands at the Mountain America Center, and the annual Idaho Falls Duck Race.

“He was a dedicated, kind, considerate, very giving person,” said Gray.

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Family of road rage victim speaks out as new details come to light

Bradley Davis

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – The mother of last week’s road rage victim in Eastern Colorado Springs remembers her son as being “larger than life” as she urges drivers in her community to stay in their vehicles on the roadway.

“When you go to get in your car, just step back and take a breath,” Alisha Helberg said. “Just stop it. Let Matthew’s memory be the one that takes you there, that gives you peace before you get in that vehicle.”

Her son, 39-year-old Matthew Helberg, was shot to death Thursday night after getting in an argument with another driver while driving home from a date with his fiancée.

The Colorado Springs Police Department (CSPD) has charged Howard Heyliger with second-degree murder in the shooting. According to witness interviews in a police affidavit obtained by KRDO13, the incident started with comments made by Heyliger’s friend about Matthew’s loud car exhaust.

According to witnesses, Helberg and his friend pulled over, while Heyliger followed behind in a separate car. Matthew and the friend got out of their vehicles and began to argue, which eventually turned into a fist fight. That’s when the friend told police Heyliger got out of his car and shot Matthew multiple times, killing him.

Heyliger told police he shot because he believed his friend’s life was in danger. The friend told police he did not feel he was in danger and didn’t know why Heyliger decided to shoot.

“I love my baby, and I can’t bring him back. None of us can,” An emotional Alisha said while sitting next to Matthew’s fiancée and their young child.

Matthew leaves behind five children, three stepchildren, and his fiancée, Sirena. His family has organized a funeral service for Matthew at the Colorado Springs Hub on July 18 at 2 p.m. Alisha has started a GoFundMe to support Sirena and her family.

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Oregon Democrats slam Republicans’ ‘Big Beautiful Bill,’ say it would cost many Oregonians health care, food aid

Harley Coldiron

(Update: adding video)

The entire press conference, livestreamed on KTVZ+, can be viewed in full by clicking the video above.

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — At a virtual press conference Wednesday afternoon, a wide array of top Oregon Democrats slammed President Trump’s budget proposal bill, which they warned would lead to thousands of Oregonians losing health care coverage and food assistance, while slashing taxes for billionaires and corporations.

The White House and Republican congressional leadership are vigorously defending the bill. “The American people gave us a clear mandate, and after four years of Democrat failure, we intend to deliver without delay,” House GOP leaders said in a joint statement.

The bill would eliminate taxes for tips and overtime, while also slashing taxes for high-income earners and corporations. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says it will add nearly four trillion to the national debt

To help pay for this, the bill would increase work requirements for those on Medicaid and require them to prove their eligibility twice a year. 

The cuts would take a particular toll on people in rural areas who are more likely to receive their health insurance through Medicaid. Here in Central Oregon, one in every three residents use Medicaid for health care coverage. Many of them are children and families.

Oregon’s senators, governor, and congressional representatives all blasted the bill, including District 5 (D) Rep.Janelle Bynum, who said, “This bill is trash. T-R-A-S-H. Trash.” She added, “This bill will have devastating impacts for Oregonians. It will cause our rural hospitals to close, it will make health care more expensive and less accessible. It cuts SNAP, forcing seniors and kids to go hungry.”

Many speakers during the online news conference called on Oregon’s only Republican Rep. Cliff Bentz to vote no on the bill. Assuming all Democrats vote against the bill, Republicans can only afford for three Republicans to defect.

Gov. Tina Kotek said she has spoken with Rep.Bentz this week and told him to consider “the impacts on his district,” which consists of very rural areas of Eastern Oregon and parts of Central Oregon.

KTVZ News did reach out to hear his perspective, though we did not immediately hear back.

Other congressional Republicans say the bill helps fulfill Trump’s campaign promise to cut taxes. Some Republican hardliners did vote against the bill in the Senate, saying it adds too much to the national debt.

Congressional Democrats in the virtual press conference also focused their concerns on how the eligibility and work requirements could lead to thousands of Oregonians losing their medicaid coverage.

“I’m ready to take the fight to every committee room, every courtroom, and every newsroom to do it,” Rep. Bynum said, her voice full of emotion.

Governor Kotek and Rep. Salinas expressed their concerns about cuts to food programs, such as SNAP. Nearly 800,000 Oregonians receive SNAP, many of whom are family households with multiple children.

Rep.Salinas said Republicans aren’t voting on the bill based on policy but rather, “a loyalty test to Donald Trump”, adding she wasn’t confident her republican colleagues would “find a backbone.”

Senator Jeff Merkley joined others who said the Senate version of the bill was even worse than the one the House passed earlier.

“I know my House colleagues will do all they can to not accept the bill as the Senate passed it,” Merkley said. “This is not done. We still have a chance to kill this horrific bill that hurts families and helps billionaires.”

The revised bill now heads to another vote in the House of Representatives, with a vote expected sometime in the next few days.

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